Books : The Memoirs of a Beautiful Boy
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Binding: Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 920
EAN: 9780312361693
ISBN: 0312361696
Label: St. Martin's Griffin
Manufacturer: St. Martin's Griffin
Number Of Items: 1
Number Of Pages: 304
Publication Date: January 06, 2009
Publisher: St. Martin's Griffin
Release Date: January 06, 2009
Sales Rank: 125594
Studio: St. Martin's Griffin
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Editorial Review:
Product Description:
The Memoirs of a Beautiful Boy is The Houston Press's Best Houston Book of the Year for 2008.
In the Dear John letter Daddy left for Mother and me, on a Saturday afternoon in early June 1996, on the inlaid Florentine table in the front entry of our house, which we found that night upon returning from a day spent in the crème-colored light of Neiman’s, Daddy wrote that he was leaving us because Mother was crazy, and because she’d driven me crazy in a way that perfectly suited her own insanity.
In a memoir studded with delicious lines and unforgettable set pieces, Robert Leleux describes his East Texas boyhood and coming of age under the tutelage of his eccentric, bewigged, flamboyant, and knowing mother.
Left high and dry by Daddy and living on their in-laws’ horse ranch in a white-pillared house they can’t afford, Robert and Mother find themselves chronically low on cash. Soon they are forced into more modest quarters, and as a teenaged Robert watches with hilarity and horror, Mother begins a desperate regimen of makeovers, extreme plastic surgeries, and finally hairpiece epoxies---all calculated to secure a new, wealthy husband.
Mother’s strategy takes her, with Robert in tow, from the glamorous environs of the Neiman Marcus beauty salon to questionable surgery offices and finally to a storefront clinic on the wrong side of Houston. Meanwhile, Robert begins his own journey away from Mother and through the local theater’s world of miscast hopefuls and thwarted ambitions---and into a romance that surprises absolutely no one but himself.
Written with a warmth and a wicked sense of fun that lighten even the most awful circumstances, The Memoirs of a Beautiful Boy is a sparkling debut.
Average Rating: 
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I bought this book after hearing an interview with the author on NPR and browsing the book in a bookstore. I kept waiting for the story to become interesting, but for me that never happened. There's lots of humor, mostly the sarcastic kind, which gets old after a while. The story was shallow, as were the characters. This seems like the kind of story that might crack up a small group sitting around a bar room table some evening and hearing the story first hand (the author was charming and funny on NPR) after having a couple of drinks to put them in a silly mood, but as a book it didn't hold my interest.
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Worth the time. The author has certainly survived and thrived and what the reader gets is a very very funny story, that is poignant at times. I laughed out loud, often. Being from the south I can relate to many of the situations!
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Like most readers of The Memoirs of A Beautiful Boy, you don't want the story to end. You feel cheated that the book wasn't 800 pages! His mother is like no other (unless they grow 'em like this in Texas!). She isn't the joy that Kevin Sessums' mother was in Mississippi Sissy (which is one of the best books ever written). Yet, you really get to understand her through all her dramatics because she truly loves that son of hers. I can't help but remember those sections of the book where Mother is at the beauty parlor and/or getting other "treatments." Leleux really has the knack for details and stretching them out until you are rolling on the floor. So, for pure joy, and a Mother out of a nighmare, get this book and pray that another one follows. Robert Leleux has earned the right with this book to join the inner circle with Augusten Burroughs, David Sedaris and Kevin Sessums. What an honor it is for us to be able to enjoy the works of these four spectacularly talented people.
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What a charming book. Sparkling, entertaining, friendly. I had the most terrific time reading Robert--and was only sorry that it had to come to an end. It's more like a chummy chat session with a funny friend than a regular memoir. A lovely time!!!
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First off, I have to say that I disagree with a few of the previous reviews. Leleux's story is just that. It is his story--I LOVED the self-deprecating wit with which he described the later part of his teenage years. CLEARLY, he knows he was spoiled--and describes these troubled years in a way that allows his reader to laugh at him and with him. In other words, he's making fun of his younger self. Beyond that, I was very moved by the ending which (not to ruin it for anyone else) implies, in a very sophisticated way, that a change of consciousness is occurring and that all of the characters (each of whom is flawed in some way) might just be growing up. I found this book to be fun and poignant and look forward to reading more from this extremely talented young writer.
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